Professional Documents
Culture Documents
CHALLENGES:
To initiate the relationship, two members of the urban community (the male and female cultural leaders) were
taken to meet the cultural leaders of the remote community. They were taken out into the bush by three
female elders to be welcomed to their land in the traditional way.
The Wathaurong leaders were then introduced to the community and spent a week in their presence, learning
and exchanging knowledge and ideas. Both of them were extremely moved by the experience and returned to
their community full of enthusiasm for continuing the relationship.
Warmun Community were also greatly moved by the experience and were very keen to visit Wathaurong
Community to see how they did business, what their organisation was like, what opportunities they had, and
to discover how they could work together.
Following this first visit it was apparent that both groups wanted to go on with the Friends Program. Jennifer
told ARC about the success of the first visit, and more funds were provided to continue the Program.
Warmun Community were so enthusiastic about the visit to Wathaurong that the community council
approved funding for several more community members, including the chairman, to go on the visit. All
participants had high hopes of what could be achieved, as each community had so much to offer the other.
Wathaurong Cooperative put a lot of effort into welcoming the Warmun Community. A day was set aside for
ceremonies to take place, and speeches and cultural performances were the order of the day. A large crowd
gathered, including the ARC management and board members. Everyone agreed that the day was a huge
success and an important first step in what could be an empowering strategy.
This was another step, I feel, in getting culture back on track, where a visit from Warmun Community
opened the eyes of a lot of (city people), Indigenous and non Indigenous. It was because of my visit to
Warmun Community that I could see there is a lot that can be done. Done in a sense of bringing home
cultural heritage awareness back into the Community here, sharing.
Allan Browning
OUTCOMES:
Red Cross were remarkable in their openness and support of this idea. The difficulty came in sustaining both
the understanding of the importance of the relationship, and financial support for it.
Allan Browning, the cultural leader and Heritage Officer of Wathaurong Cooperative, realised the value of this
relationship immediately, as had Peggy Patrick, a senior law woman of Warmun Community, who immediately
took Allan under her wing and claimed him as her son. They both expressed very clearly the benefits to each
others community that the friendship would provide. This was an opportunity for Indigenous people to help
each other, but there was no funding that could be applied for the situation was not seen to be important.
The original request from the young woman at Wathaurong was for support to learn about culture and
about how to pass on that knowledge, the strength of her people. Allan said that the program was a way of
getting culture back on track. For urban people who had been severely impacted by white settlement, the
opportunity to get their culture back on track with support from elders from a remote region was very
significant. Yet, as hard as he tried, Allan could not get support to continue this relationship, either from the
government or from any other sources he approached. The program was not seen as a priority.
Peggy had a great impact on Allan, and part of her speech to Wathaurong shows that she recognised that the
Warmun elders could support urban people in strengthening their culture:
He made me cry when I bin see that paint (ochre) come to me. Some time paint tell you story any sort of
paint, red, yellow, white, black from ground we get im, and he tell you story. Some time like a red ochre
he fall to pieces, yellow one, if anyone dont own em, nobody this time, nobody using em. No but we
still get em, we still use em, we still remind people where we come from properly we from ground, we
bin born with it, Ngarranggani, Dreamtime for us he remind you where you really come from and what is
mean to you.
Country sometime he come in you, he dont know you sometime, when you dont own im, he dont
know you. Some other people can understand this kind of um, stories, but now we bin come just to
remind this young fella, remind this place Wathaurong, we be just come to remind this place an open
their thinking, open their heart, what dis country mean to them.
That what we bin come for, to open their heart and think where they belong to.
Peggy Patrick
Tragically, Allan passed away before he could fulfil his dream to return to Warmun, and to Peggy.
For more information see the full report in additional resources on the case study page.
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1. Listening to the Chairman of Warmun invite Wathaurong to develop a relationship with Warmun. 2. The two communities meet. 3. The two communities greet each other and prepare for their
performances. 4. Quenton, Jennifer and Max, chairperson of Warmun Community listen to the speeches. 5. Allan talks with Red Cross Executive, they applaud him on the performances.
6. Partnerships, Warmun welcoming Wathaurong. 7. Peggy leads the way into the ceremonial circle. 8. Peggy receives the red ochre from Wathaurong. 9. Warmun perform for the Wathaurong
community. 10. Women visit Red Cross. 11. Visiting the Wathaurong glass workshop.
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